Setting The Vaccine apart is Riaz’s command of science, the process of getting approval, the funding of research, and other crucial elements, which he brings to persuasive life. Also arresting: the characterization of Jasmine and Sofia, Boyd’s wife and daughter, whose lives have been upended by a pandemic that prompted harsher shutdown protocols than the U.S. experienced during Covid-19. Jasmine’s discovery that her husband has access to a (purportedly) effective vaccine but has not given it to their daughter results in strong, suspenseful conflict.
That’s a refreshingly humane conflict. While Riaz’s story builds to some big twists, revelations, and bursts of action, its heart is in characters like Boyd, striving to do what’s best— to save the health of billions, or to protect their own families. An atmosphere of queasy anxiety suffuses the tale, exemplified by scenes where a neighbor of the Boyd family, health failing due to the protracted pandemic shutdown, watches Jasmine and Sofia, and then discovers someone else is doing the same. Riaz offers smart thriller chills and a satisfying ending, but it’s in its thoughtful depiction of people and their lives and choices that The Vaccine gets under the skin.
Takeaway: A smart, humane thriller about a scientist’s efforts to stop a global pandemic.
Great for fans of: Daniel Kalla’s Lost Immunity, Paul John Scott’s Malcharist.
Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-
A deadly virus plagues the planet, and the only effective vaccine may never see the light of day in this dystopian medical thriller from Riaz...alll these characters come across as easy to identify with, and the refreshingly original ending is far from the tidy closure that mystery readers have come to expect...An intricately plotted and fast-paced thriller from a medical expert who knows the territory.